This monograph deals with the &#8216;aboutness&#8217; of language. First, the sense in which language &#8216;is about&#8217; or &#8216;reflects&#8217; both reality and a mental picture of reality is turned into a cornerstone of a reflectionist or &#8216;Speculative Grammarian&#8217; semantics and pragmatics. Second, the &#8216;Speculative Grammar&#8217; idea is made concrete in a logico-linguistic account of the way language &#8216;is about&#8217; the whole of reality as well as about certain fractions of it. Third, the reflectionist perspective is used for a universalist account of the way speech acts &#8216;are about&#8217; their subjects, topics, and foci.